Ziegler’s global emergence serves as the backdrop for his latest hometown project: a mural on the side of the building that houses the Sequoia Theatre, on the west-facing wall that overlooks the new dining deck of the soon-to-open Playa restaurant. The venture came about quickly – and will happen in a flash.

Soon after they purchased Playa in June from Karen Goldberg, Bill and Vanessa Higgins and Peter Schumacher, whose Real Restaurants company owns Mill Valley landmarks Buckeye Roadhouse and Bungalow 44, among others, reached out to Ziegler about creating a mural above the deck. Ziegler, the son of Banana Republic founders Mel and Patricia Ziegler, was game, and serendipitously had a small window of time before he heads overseas in early August for more previously-scheduled mural projects.

The group obtained permission from theatre owner Friends of the Sequoia Theater, with California Film Institute Executive Director Mark Fishkin, one of the group’s managing partners, calling the proposed mural a community “asset that enhances the beautiful common areas that have been incorporated into the new design of Playa's outdoor space.”

And on July 26, the Planning Commission voted unanimously to allow the project to proceed, with the caveat that the mural be “G-rated” and “compatible with Mill Valley’s small-town character.”

“It’s a beautiful opportunity,” Bill Higgins told the Commission. “We think the world of Zio.”

​Partners bought landmark Mill Valley business from the family of the late Mary Turnbull, who founded the famed bookstore and cafe with her husband William Turnbull in 1987.

UPDATE 8.3.16: The Depot is currently closed due to a permitting delay but plans to be back open in the coming days.

One of Mill Valley's landmark institutions, located inside the most famous building in town, changed hands in April, and its new owners have spent the past few months examining the business and planning its future.

A group of investors headed by Vasco owner Paul Lazzareschi and Piazza D’Angelo co-owner Domenico Petrone have taken over the Depot Bookstore & Cafe from the family of the late Mary Turnbull, who founded the famed bookstore and cafe with her husband William Turnbull in 1987. Turnbull, who also co-founded the legendary Tides Bookstore in Sausalito, died peacefully of natural causes on September 30, 2015.

“We are thrilled at the opportunity to take the reins of one of Mill Valley’s landmark institutions,” Petrone said. “We've been analyzing every aspect of the business over the past few months so that we can both preserve the elements that mean so much to this community and also usher in some great new ideas that people will love.”

The depot building, which also contains the Mill Valley Chamber of Commerce & Visitor Center, is owned by the City of Mill Valley. The existing lease on the property runs through December 31, 2016, and Puffin has exercised the last of its five-year extensions, which would take it to December 31, 2021. The Depot pays the City a base rent plus a percentage of total sales.The depot building was built by the Northwestern Pacific Railroad in 1928. It served as the terminal for electric and oil trains that between Mill Valley to the Sausalito ferry docks. The railroad shut down in the 1940s and morphed into a bus depot, used first by Greyhound and later by Golden Gate Transit.

In the 1970s, the building was re-invented as Ganey’s Bookstore and Cafe, which it remained until the Turnbull family took over the lease in 1987.

Lazzareschi says they plan some outdoor improvements, such as lighting and heating that would allow nighttime food service on the patio. They also plan to explore some floor plan changes inside, and are open to making those changes in conjunction with the City's long-planned construction of a new bathroom in the building later this year (click here for the Depot's proposed changes via plans from Mill Valley architect Evan Cross).​“This is going to be very exciting,” Lazzareschi said.

Building on the success of her Gigi + Rose and Jackson + Polk stores in San Francisco, designer Kristina De Pizzol brings her latest concept to downtown Mill Valley.

In describing the newest retail shop in downtown Mill Valley, it’s best to start with inspiration before inventory.

At Pollen + Wool, which opened for a sneak peak last week at 21 Throckmorton Ave. in downtown Mill Valley, creative energy abounds. The source of that creativity is owner Kristina de Pizzol, who draws inspiration from both the personal and the global: her Norwegian heritage, the powerful role that bees and pollen play in the history of our planet, the elemental fabric of wool itself.

Pollen + Wool’s tagline is “Gather. Made. Splendid. Live the Life You’ve Imagined,” with that last part coming from the words of Henry David Thoreau.

“This is meant to be a special place that centers on valuing what you think is important in life,” De Pizzol says. “It’s not an exclusive place. It’s a place where you’ll find things that are beautiful and unique. But it’s also a space where you can make things, hold events and is more of just a lifestyle.”

Now onto the what. Step inside the bright, gorgeous, 2,500-square foot space of Pollen + Wool and you’ll find a selection so eclectic that you’ll realize why we started with the inspiration rather than the inventory: A create-a-terrarium workspace. Andrew Goldsworthy-esque furniture and housewares. Gorgeous women’s clothing. A library. Reclaimed wood artwork. A teepee. Jewelry. An array of plants.

Pollen + Wool is De Pizzol’s latest creation. The Marin native spent the early part of her professional life in the San Francisco clothing design world, launching her own vintage-inspired clothing line called Delilah Crown, which was based on Green Street in North Beach for many years.

When she had children, De Pizzol decided that didn’t want to manage both her retail and wholesale businesses any longer, so she opened Gigi + Rose, named for her two young daughters, to focus on retail. The whimsical shop in Ghiradelli Square carries both women’s and children’s clothing and is “meant to be a happy place for you and your daughters,” she says. “It’s all about coming to the city and a mom and a daughter just having a nice day together.”

The success of the Gigi + Rose allowed De Pizzol in 2013 to open Jackson + Polk, a shop featuring men’s clothing, housewares, art, accessories, books and much more. Under the tagline, “We live by the City. We live by the sea. We love urban life. We love nature,” Jackson + Polk celebrates “what we love about San Francisco, with all of the makers and thinkers and wanting to have an intelligent, sometimes humorous conversation,” De Pizzol says. “I really just don’t want to ever underestimate the people who come into my stores. And I want to treat kids like they’re intelligent as well.”

De Pizzol says she chose Mill Valley for a variety of reasons. Her daughters go to school in Marin, and she’s always loved Mill Valley “because it has a heart – it has a physical center to its downtown. And I see this space as a creative gathering place where people can come and enjoy their time. And it’s a good fit for the town. People that choose to live in Mill Valley do so for a reason.”

The 411: Pollen + Wool is currently in “sneak peak” mode, and plans to host opening events in the coming weeks.

But Albert also showed a flair for taking the path less traveled, playing baseball instead of softball at Tam and becoming the only girl to so in the Marin County Athletic League at that time. And after graduating from Willamette University, Albert’s journey completely diverged from the typical – it’s safe to say that having a river AND a toddler named after you in Muambong, Cameroon, on the heels of a 30-month Peace Corps stint there, qualifies as the path less traveled.

Now Albert’s circuitous path has brought her home. The 25-year-old is the new Community Services Officer for the Mill Valley Police Department, replacing Sheryl Patton, who served in that role for 15 years, and was introduced to the City Council last week by Police Chief Angel Bernal.

“We are extremely fortunate and happy to have Allely joining us and I can’t say enough about having this bright young person who we pray will stay with us for a very long time to come,” Bernal told the Council.

In her new role, Albert will play an integral role in MVPD’s outreach to the community and serve as a “jill of all trades” in supporting nearly all fects of the department, Bernal said. Albert’s experience in Muambong showed she has a penchant for successfully connecting with a community.

Albert spent two-and-a-half years volunteering for the Peace Corps in Muambong, a farming community of approximately 5,000 residents spread across more than a half dozen villages. The experience changed her life, as she spearheaded a wide range of programs that spanned epilepsy, a pen pal program between a Muambong school and Park School in Mill Valley, a malaria campaign, nutritional education and, after she extended her stay at the request of the community, helping to create a new water system.

“The people there were just some of the most amazing people I have ever met, so warm and kind and welcoming,” Albert says. “I was the first volunteer that they had had in a very long time.”

In the time that she was there, a family named their baby after Albert and the village elders named a nearby river after her. And when Albert’s family came to visit over the holidays in 2014-15, “they presented my family with a live goat,” Albert wrote in a blog post. “They wanted my family to bring it back to America with them, but after a few explanations about the rules and regulations of airplanes, it was ultimately decided the goat would stay with me. So I am now the proud and clueless owner of a ram.” Her family’s visit was the reason for four village parties in three days, including a number of musical performances of songs that were specifically created for Albert’s family.

Albert says she’s thrilled at her latest opportunity.​“Being able to combine the community outreach component with my interest in criminal justice and law – and to do it in my hometown – is a really exciting opportunity,” Albert says.

John Maxwell spent 28 years as a set decorator in Hollywood, working on blockbuster films like Pirates of the Caribbean, Seven, Panic Room, Jerry Maguire, Almost Famous, As Good As It Gets, Ocean’s 13, Tropic Thunder, Bridesmaids and Apollo 13, among others.

During the making of many of those films, Maxwell would head back to his hotel at the end of the day and dive deeply into his love of collage art. The Mill Valley resident was first drawn to collage art in the mid-1970s while living in Marin, studying photography and art at the San Francisco Art Institute. He drew inspiration from the likes of Alton Kelley and Stanley Mouse, two of the original five psychedelic artists of the Fillmore and Avalon Ballroom days.​On the heels of his retirement from Hollywood in 2014, Maxwell is set to showcase his JMX Postcards, a collection of collage-style postcards at the at the Mill Valley Chamber of Commerce & Visitor Center (85 Throckmorton) throughout August, with a wine reception on August 2 (6–8pm) as part of the Mill Valley Arts Commission's First Tuesday Artwalk. The monthly celebration of local art includes a host of venues, including the O’Hanlon Center for the Arts, Seager Gray Gallery, the Mill Valley Public Library, Dolls and Dandy Salon, Terrestra, the Depot Bookstore & Café and City Hall. Receptions at each venue are Tuesday from 6–8pm. Here’s the First Tuesday Artwalk Guide with venues and a map.

The Milley Awards, Mill Valley’s annual celebration of its community’s vast amount of creative achievement and distinguished accomplishments in the arts, unveiled its 2016 class of winners this week. As usual, it’s a celebrated group from a wide array of fields, all providing yet another reminder of the vitality of the local arts and entertainment scene.The Milley’s 22nd annual gala is set for October 23 at 6pm at the Community Center. The following standouts will be honored:

Maria Muldaur – Musical Arts

​An integral force in the Greenwich Village folk music revival of the 1960s alongside the likes of Bob Dylan, Muldaur made her home in Mill Valley soon after. Best known for the hit single “Midnight at the Oasis,” which reached #6 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1974, her career includes 40 albums spanning folk, jazz, gospel, Big Band and now primarily blues genres, and six Grammy nominations. The longtime Mill Valley resident continues to tour and collaborate across the U.S.

Jasson Minadakis – Performing and Film Arts

​For the past 10 years, Minadakis has left an indelible artistic imprint on the Marin Theatre Company, driving the organization to new heights as it enters its 50th season. Under the Mill Valley resident’s leadership, MTC has expanded its production of original, cutting-edge American plays, by young and especially African-American playwrights, in part by creating two nationwide playwriting competitions in just his second year there. MTC and Mill Valley are now established in the first ranks of regional American theatre. Minadakis has also dramatically expanded MTC’s education programs, including both performances and classes that serve over 12,000 Marin students annually.

Bob Bijou – Community Contributions

​Take one step into Two Neat and be immersed into the creative spirit, music, geography and state of mind of Mill Valley and Marin County. Bijou, who lives in Sausalito, is the store’s founder and owner, and for almost 30 years, he’s used this gem of a shop to celebrate artists, musicians and just plain fun. Bijou, who lives in Sausalito, also created and maintains the millvalleymap.com website, and co-founded Watts Up!, Mill Valley’s storefront holiday lighting program.

Jacques Leslie – Literary Arts

​An environmental author, essayist, and former Pulitzer Prize-nominated war correspondent, this Mill Valley resident won the Sigma Delta Chi Distinguished Service Award and an Overseas Press Club citation for his coverage of the Vietnam War, during which he became the first American journalist to enter and return from Vietcong territory in South Vietnam. Leslie has also won national awards for his work in newspapers, magazines, and books, and his tome, “Deep Water: The Epic Struggle Over Dams, Displaced People, and the Environment,” won the J. Anthony Lukas Work-in-Progress Award for its “beautiful, elegant prose.”

Arthur “Tripp” Carpenter – Visual Arts and Design

​A third-generation designer and maker of fine, collectible wood furniture, vessels and ornamental objects from his studio in Bolinas, this Mill Valley resident made and donated the Mill Valley City Hall entryway bench, and built the new reference desk and book drop for the town’s library. published “Education of a Woodsmith,” the autobiography and creative handbook of his father, renowned wood craftsman Art Espenet Carpenter.

The Milley Award is a bronze statuette created by John Libberton of Sausalito. The annual gala event is produced by a volunteer board of directors, under the auspices of the Mill Valley Art Commission. Tickets for the 2016 Milley Awards include a reception, dinner, and the awards program. They will go on sale in early September. MORE INFO.

The Mill Valley-Sausalito Multiuse Path stretching from Mike’s Bikes in Sausalito north to East Blithedale Ave. in Mill Valley was built 35 years ago. Since its debut in 1981, it has become one of the most popular paths in the entire Bay Area, with more than a half-million people using it between March and November each year, according to the annual WalkBikeMarin Path Counts.

Despite its age and heavy use, the path hasn't been repaved since its inception, save for a few minor touch-ups. After several years of delays, that's going to change in 2017, as the County of Marin has federal grant money in hand and plans to lay a fresh coat of smooth asphalt and make accessibility improvements on almost a mile of the pathway by late 2017.

The Marin County Department of Public Works will oversee the design and construction of the project on a 4,900-foot-long stretch of the pathway between from East Blithedale Avenue on the north end and Almonte Boulevard to the south. That portion runs along the waterfront of Richardson’s Bay’s Pickleweed Inlet, adjacent to the Mill Valley Community Center, Mill Valley Middle School, the Sewerage Agency of Southern Marin, Bothin Marsh and Tamalpais High School.

The County of Marin was awarded $320,000 of federal Priority Conservation Area funding, with a $320,000 local match provided by County Parks’ Measure A fund, a quarter-cent retail and use tax passed by local voters in 2012. DPW aims to design and acquire environmental clearance in 2016 for the work, which will include repaving and installation of new benches with accessible sitting areas. It hopes to put the project out to bid in summer 2017 and begin construction in fall 2017.

During construction, bikers and pedestrians will have to use detours:

The County of Marin (DPW, Marin County Parks, and Marin County Sheriff’s Office), the City of Mill Valley and the Marin County Bicycle Coalition are collaborating to improve access and safety along the route. Fresh striping and stencils were added recently. In addition to the physical improvements from DPW, there are three other parts of the overall plan:

a Share the Path campaign, which promotes safety, trail communication and friendliness;

County officials say they plan to resurface the rest of the 3.1-mile pathway and replace the bridges when funding becomes available. In May 2015, a first-of-its-kind roundabout intersection was installed on the pathway near Mill Valley Middle School to enhance safety. In 2014, the City of Mill Valley added a short connector pathway at Sycamore Avenue to help people reach the main pathway.​Bike riders and pedestrians will use detour routes during pathway construction. Learn more about DPW’s construction schedule online.

Three years ago, the Kaliskis came up with another winner – the Golf Fore Giving event to raise money to support St. Vincent de Paul Society’s free dining room, which serves up hot meals 365 days a year and provides vital services to Marin families, children, senior citizens, people with disabilities and the homeless. The 4th annual edition of that event returns on Monday, August 8 at Peacock Gap Golf Club in San Rafael, featuring Hall of Famer Vida Blue.

“We were thrilled to be able to award $30,000 to St. Vincent de Paul after last year’s Golf Fore Giving event,” said Foundation Board Chairman and event organizer Bob Kaliski. “That $30,000 enabled St. Vincent to provide 15,000 meals to needy families in our community and we are grateful to those who supported the event by either participating in golf during the day, attending the banquet in the evening, or both.”

The 411:Harbor Point Charitable Foundation (HPCF)’s Golf Fore Giving gives is on Monday, August 8 at the Peacock Gap Golf Club & Clubhouse, 333 Biscayne Dr., San Rafael, CA). Proceeds from the event help St. Vincent de Paul’s Free Dining Room. Golf registration is $175 per person or $700 per foursome (includes box lunch and the evening Banquet); fundraising Banquet is $75 per person and features a silent auction, raffle prizes, and an Italian themed dinner with wine. MORE INFO.

The two-day immersive experience blends game design, theater and interactive storytelling, all wrapped into travel package throughout Marin. STAYCATION ALERT: While the travel package includes a convertible and a night’s stay at a cozy seaside hotel, a DIY version lets local users participate at a lower cost.

In the span of his short morning run near downtown Mill Valley last Sunday, City Councilman Jim Wickham happened upon multiple groups of people – including a pack of about 50 near Old Mill Park – with their eyes on their phones as they searched for Pokemon, the virtual creatures that are at the center of the international phenomenon that is Pokemon Go.

With more than 21 million users in just the two weeks since it launched, and a projected $3 billion in revenue, the location-based augmented reality mobile game has taken the world by storm. But while Pokemon Go is surely a global phenomenon, another immersive game experience right here in Marin is combining technology and the real-world into an immersive, theatrical experience – with Marin itself playing a starring role.

Meet the Headlands Gamble, “an attempt to bring together the interactivity of a videogame with the real-world immersiveness of a theatrical experience like Sleep No More – all packaged as a travel experience,” says Gabe Smedresman, the co-creator of the Headlands Gamble. “And what makes us unique from the likes of Pokemon Go and others is that we’re not just trying to pull you into the real world – we are taking all of the spectacular beauty that Marin has to offer and we’re showcasing it.”

Bhabha wrote the Agatha Christie-style mystery that takes participants on a two-day journey throughout Marin, though we’ll keep the specific sites to ourselves so as not to spoil the fun. Smedresman, the creator of the game Pretweeting whose wife Catherine Herdlick is the San Francisco director of Come Out and Play, an annual festival of street games, has worked in the field “of digital and mixed reality experiences that mix the technological and the real” for several years.

In running the business side of First Person Travel, Smedresman says that while they are far from the first people to dive into this space, they are among the first to try to make it a sustainable businesses by adding the travel component. Unlike the hour-or-two experiences like escape rooms and Sleep No More, the Headlands Gamble is a wholly-curated weekend for two.

“We serve as a travel agency in that we’ll plan everything about your trip – but we also give you a mystery to solve over the course of your weekend,” he says.

The mystery unfolds in a variety of ways, from car trips to key sites in Marin to the Headlands Gamble’s iPad-based dashboard where clues and characters are introduced, as well as from actors who pop up along the way. The logistics of making it all happen are complicated, Smedresman says, and involve an off-site stage manager and a field operations person who travels ahead of the participants to set up the scene and the actors, along with the iPad dashboard that keeps the experience moving along. And in an oft-serendipitous wrinkle, participants regularly encounter people at their destinations and must determine if they are part of the experience or not.

“That feeling of not knowing what’s part of it and what’s not is exactly what we’re going for,” Smedresman. “That’s the place we’re trying to get you to, where the technological, the theatrical and the real all meet.”

Smedresman says he’s been excited to dive into this venture and believes the amazing success of mixed-reality games like Pokemon Go will only help.

“Pokemon is the perfect property to use for an augmented reality game – a match made in heaven,” he says. “My hope is that it augurs for an increased awareness of these applications that blur the line the reality between reality and fiction.”​The 411: The Headlands Gamble is two-day immersive experience that blends game design, theater and interactive storytelling, all wrapped into travel package throughout Marin. While the travel package includes a convertible and a night’s stay at a cozy seaside hotel, a DIY version lets local users participate at a lower cost.

When Scott Rubin opened his Mathnasium Mill Valley tutoring center in 2012, he drew on his career as a financial analyst on Wall Street and his desire to pass on his love of math to kids in his newly adopted hometown.

Just four years later, Rubin has returned from the 12th Annual Mathnasium Convention in Dallas, Texas, with plaques and trophies in hand to mark his Mathnasium garnering the second-highest revenue among 700 Mathnasium franchises in the United States.

“When I left NYC to start a new career, I could not have imagined how fulfilling owning a Mathnasium would be,” Rubin says. “It has given me the opportunity to be a positive influence on the lives of so many children. They, in turn, have made a profound impact on my own life. My wife and I are grateful that Mathnasium has provided us the experience of getting to know so many young lives. My favorite part of the day, is being greeted by kids as they come in with big smiles on their faces and full of stories and jokes to share with me. I feel so fortunate to love my work and look forward to each day at Mathnasium.”

Rubin, who spent several years on Wall Street, says that his Mathnasium has grown consistently since he opened it four years ago, and he credits the communities in Mill Valley, Tiburon, Corte Madera and the surrounding areas his its success.

“They’ve been so welcoming and supportive of the business, and continue to be,” he says. “It’s been great.”

Rubin says that he teaches math to kids in a way that make sense to them, designing a learning plan that is unique to each child based on an initial assessment.

“Children learn to speak as if by magic and with little or no apparent effort on anyone’s part, largely because they are immersed in a sea of oral language from the very first day,” Rubin says. “Math can be learned in very much the same way.”​The 411: Mathnasium Mill Valley is open 7 days a week. Hours vary. More info.